Daily Mail

Thumb op that means you can button shirts and open jars again

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OSTEOARTHR­ITIS of the thumb affects up to 12 per cent of adults. Paul Barrett, 67, a retired Navy officer from Purbrook, Hampshire, took part in a trial of a new implant to treat it, as he tells LUCY HOLDEN.

One of my favourite hobbies is DIY. I enjoy it all, even putting in a new staircase, as I find it therapeuti­c. Dad was a woodwork teacher, so I inherited this love from him.

But in 2013, my thumbs started to ache and I began to find it difficult to open jars and turn door handles — they hurt so much when I tried to grip things.

I had a blood test to find out if it was rheumatoid arthritis, but the results came back clear.

I hoped the pain would improve, but gradually it got worse. My wife, Anne, was having to do up my shoelaces and shirt buttons for me, and I couldn’t do DIY for more than an hour because of the excruciati­ng pain and stiffness.

I could feel and hear the bones at the base of my thumbs grinding, particular­ly in my right hand.

I don’t like sitting still so not being able to work properly was making me miserable.

I went back to my GP in January 2015. He said it might be osteoarthr­itis and referred me to have an X-ray, which I had a week later. It showed osteoarthr­itis in both thumbs.

The doctor explained that the cartilage around the joints had worn away — partly due to years of manual work.

It meant the two bones in my thumbs were grinding against each other, causing pain and restrictin­g movement.

I was worried I wouldn’t be able to use my hands properly again. The doctor reassured me there were treatments: steroid injections to reduce inflammati­on and, if they didn’t work, surgery to cut out the bone that was grinding and causing pain.

I tried steroid injections first, which were not a success. I was ready to go back and have surgery, but was diagnosed with prostate cancer in February 2015, so I had to wait until the cancer treatment had finished.

Luckily, I was given the allclear in August 2015.

I went back to the hospital and was told that a new trial for a thumb implant was starting. The consultant said it involved inserting a rubbery implant between the two bones to replace the lost cartilage.

I was asked whether I’d like to join the trial — it would mean they wouldn’t have to remove the bone in my thumb and I would retain better movement and grip in my hand. THAT sounded like a nobrainer, so I said yes. We agreed that they would try it in my right thumb first because it was worse than my left one.

I had to wait for the trial to start and had the procedure under general anaestheti­c in March 2016.

When I woke up, my arm was numb and I had a slight ache around my thumb, but I didn’t need painkiller­s.

I went home with my arm in a cast and couldn’t do very much for six weeks. Then I had a splint taped between my wrist and thumb to hold it in place for another six weeks. I think they were just being extra cautious because it was a trial, but I could already feel that the grinding had disappeare­d.

I had hand therapy for six weeks at the hospital to help strengthen my thumb and ease the joint back into a full range of movement.

A year on, I’m completely painfree and am back working around the house. I feel as though I’ve never even had arthritis in my right hand.

I can do up my shirt buttons, open jars and turn door handles without any problems.

I am hoping to have the same operation soon on my left thumb, which is gradually getting worse. THE SURGEON PhiliP SAuve is a consultant orthopaedi­c surgeon at the Queen Alexandra hospital in Portsmouth. OsTeOArTHr­ITIs in the thumb is incredibly common, because whenever we hold a pencil, undo a bottle top or twist a key into a lock, a lot of force is channelled through the joint.

It is sometimes the result of overuse of the joint, which destroys the cartilage — the buffer between bones — meaning bone rubs on bone, which causes pain, stiffness and can reduce movement. It’s also thought that injury can bring on osteoarthr­itis by damaging the cartilage, or it may be that genetics are to blame.

We can offer steroid injections, which are anti-inflammato­ry and take the edge off the pain.

How effective they are varies. They work less well when the arthritis is more advanced, which is why they didn’t work brilliantl­y for Paul. WHEN steroid jabs don’t work, we offer surgery called trapeziect­omies — where we remove the trapezium bone at the base of the thumb, which acts like an anchor and holds the thumb in place at the joint.

This involves opening up the thumb joint, removing the bone and letting the scar tissue heal in its place.

Patients wear casts for several weeks to keep the hand in a fixed position and allow scar tissue to form.

The downside is that removal of bone means the thumb sits nearer the wrist, which reduces its movement and a patient’s ability to grip properly.

But we are trialling an implant called Cartiva — a synthetic cartilage implant.

It comes in one size and is already used to treat osteoarthr­itis in the big toe.

Because that joint is similar to the thumb, doctors thought that the implant could work well there, too.

The rubbery implant is about 1cm wide and 8mm long, and is made of a gel that has a similar consistenc­y to cartilage: firm, but flexible.

Patients have the option of being awake for the operation and just having a local anaestheti­c, or they can opt for a general anaestheti­c.

We first make an inch-long incision at the base of the thumb (palm side down) and expose the end of the two bones that are rubbing.

We then make an 8mm hole at the end of the bone in the thumb and squeeze in the implant.

Then we sew the incision using dissolvabl­e stitches.

The whole procedure takes about 45 minutes, and the patient can go home the same day. In the trial, patients spend about six weeks in plaster casts and then have a splint fitted for another six weeks to help the thumb heal properly.

With the gel implant, the recovery period is longer than after standard surgery, but it’s because we’re being extra careful until we’re more familiar with it.

six weeks of hand therapy improves movement and strengthen­s grip, meaning everyday tasks such as turning keys and buttoning a shirt become possible.

You get much less function when you remove the thumb bone. It’s still early days, but the results look good so far and should be released officially by next year.

The first phase of the trial in 50 patients at ten hospitals in the UK and Canada has finished.

A second phase should start later this year at the Queen Alexandra Hospital and other hospitals elsewhere in the UK.

The implant is likely to cost £5,000 privately and to the NhS.

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